Sunday, May 16, 2026--San Antonio
The Charm Offensive by Alison Cochrun was written 5 years ago. I found it on a list of suggested books for summer reading. It's a romantic comedy based around the production of a reality TV show where the "prince" is expected to find his "princess" among 20 women competing to be the one he asks to marry him. The show has been made for almost 2 decades and is a little "tired." Everyone knows that it is always white, religious men and women participating, that only a very small number of matches have been successful over time, and that former contestants have revealed that they were never looking for marriage or everlasting love but participated for various other reasons--to promote their podcast, to possibly become famous and get better job offers, to take advantage of the travel aspects of the show (which goes to various parts of the world during each season), etc. This year's prince is a man who was a co-owner of a highly successful tech company where he did the behind-the-scenes work like programming to make it successful. But his partner in the company greatly embarrassed him by exposing his awkwardness (OCD), anxiety, and related social interaction problems and then fired him. He can't get another job in IT because of the bad publicity and world-of-mouth from that incident. He has signed up to go on this show to try to find a way to reintroduce himself to the world, especially the IT world where he would like to work again. Things are awkward from the beginning of the shooting of the show because of his mental and social problems, but his handler (the producer assigned to be with him and guide him throughout the production period of 3 months) immediately realizes that the problems he has can be overcome if he can calm him, get him to open up about what is happening, get him to trust him, etc. The book carries the reader through the various weeks of production and the problems that are occurring. The questions that are always present: 1) Will he be able to avoid being awkward on the show? Will the show be interesting enough for audiences enjoy if he cannot come across and warm and caring? Will he be able to fall in love with one of the women? Will everything fall apart? And most of all, will his handler be able to do his job which seems almost impossible with the problems the prince has? It isn't great literature, but it's a fun story to read. I gave it 4 1/2 stars out of 5.